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Jan 1, 2013
01/13
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CNBC
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it was a dream, really. >> exactly when bernie madoff went wrong is unclear. but as his reputation for delivering steady profits grew, the madoffs began living the good life. a penthouse in manhattan, homes in palm beach and the south of france, and yachts in both places. >> he was a big figure in the industry. he was the chairman of nasdaq. he was constantly being honored as "man of the year" of this organization and that. and that--that had an effect on me. >> both sons went to work as traders for their father's firm in the late '80s, a time authorities believe madoff's ponzi scheme was well under way. why would your father want to taint his sons by bringing into a situation that could, well, spell disaster? >> you know, that's-- that's a great question. and that's something that i really agonize over as a son. you know, what my father did was so horrible. and it's hard for me to-- hard for me to understand that. >> bernard l. madoff securities employed over 100 people, but it seemed like a family business. his brother peter and several cousins worked there.
it was a dream, really. >> exactly when bernie madoff went wrong is unclear. but as his reputation for delivering steady profits grew, the madoffs began living the good life. a penthouse in manhattan, homes in palm beach and the south of france, and yachts in both places. >> he was a big figure in the industry. he was the chairman of nasdaq. he was constantly being honored as "man of the year" of this organization and that. and that--that had an effect on me. >> both...
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115
Jan 3, 2013
01/13
by
WETA
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eye 115
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madoff with boots, doing what bernie madoff would do in his ponzi scheme. he never got caught. >> they take a dim view -- sentencing them to 20 years, and another got 99 years. the code of the west still counts for something. if you break it, the rangers come after you. >> 99 years for cattle rustling. serious sentence for the bernie madoff -- >> provocative -- from "pulp fiction" to "inglourious basterds," he has spent 20 years enteraining audiences. our arts editor sat down recently with quentin tarantino. >> what's your name? >> django. >> and you're the one i'm looking for. >> "django unchained," the new film by tarantino about slavery in the south, told like a spaghetti western. >> i am a big fan of the director of the original "django" and his west is the most violent, brutal, and surreal west and no character is guaranteed safe passage and when i thought of the closest equivalent of that west that he pre sented, i thought, being aslave a slave in the antebellum south. >> in my world you have to ge t dirty. >> violence is a key subject of your work. >
madoff with boots, doing what bernie madoff would do in his ponzi scheme. he never got caught. >> they take a dim view -- sentencing them to 20 years, and another got 99 years. the code of the west still counts for something. if you break it, the rangers come after you. >> 99 years for cattle rustling. serious sentence for the bernie madoff -- >> provocative -- from "pulp fiction" to "inglourious basterds," he has spent 20 years enteraining audiences. our...
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161
Jan 3, 2013
01/13
by
KQED
tv
eye 161
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madoff with boots, doing what bernie madoff would do in his ponzi scheme. he never got caught. >> they take a dim view -- sentencing them to 20 years, and another got 99 years. the code of the west still counts for something. if you break it, the rangers come after you. >> 99 years for cattle rustling. serious sentence for the bernie madoff -- >> provocative -- from "pulp fiction" to "inglourious basterds," he has spent 20 years enteraining audiences. our arts editor sat down recently with quentin tarantino. >> what's your name? >> django. >> and you're the one i'm looking for. >> "django unchained," the new film by tarantino about slavery in the south, told like a spaghetti western. >> i am a big fan of the director of the original "django" and his west is the most violent, brutal, and surreal west and no character is guaranteed safe passage and when i thought of the closest equivalent of that west that he pre sented, i thought, being aslave a slave in the antebellum south. >> in my world you have to ge t dirty. >> violence is a key subject of your work. >
madoff with boots, doing what bernie madoff would do in his ponzi scheme. he never got caught. >> they take a dim view -- sentencing them to 20 years, and another got 99 years. the code of the west still counts for something. if you break it, the rangers come after you. >> 99 years for cattle rustling. serious sentence for the bernie madoff -- >> provocative -- from "pulp fiction" to "inglourious basterds," he has spent 20 years enteraining audiences. our...
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63
Jan 11, 2013
01/13
by
FBC
tv
eye 63
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he was talking to bernie madoff. i am >> announcer: you never know when, but thieves can steal your identity and turn your life upside down. >> hi. >> hi. you know, i can save you 15% today if you open up a charge card account with us. >> you just read my mind. >> announcer: just one little piece of information and they can open bogus accounts, stealing your credit, your money and ruining your reputation. that's why you need lifelock to relentlessly protect what matters most... [beeping...] helping stop crooks before your identity is attacked. and now you can have the most comprehensive identity theft protection available today... lifelock ultimate. so for protection you just can't get anywhere else, get lifelock ultimate. >> i didn't know how serious identity theft was until i lost my credit and eventually i lost my home. >> announcer: credit monitoring is not enough, because it tells you after the fact, sometimes as much as 30 days later. with lifelock, as soon as our network spots a threat to your identity, you'll
he was talking to bernie madoff. i am >> announcer: you never know when, but thieves can steal your identity and turn your life upside down. >> hi. >> hi. you know, i can save you 15% today if you open up a charge card account with us. >> you just read my mind. >> announcer: just one little piece of information and they can open bogus accounts, stealing your credit, your money and ruining your reputation. that's why you need lifelock to relentlessly protect what...
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what comes to mind i things like bernie madoff. whatould you do about that? budding bernie madoff and you do the investigation and homework and what you do before you let the kid n and pox on you if you can't figure out if he is a bad or good kid. i know they can do that, that is part of college. you can do it every day and no one will ever know. there is it a and given them three paths to screw up. that is it erased. and still in facebook page. that is another ways. if it is important to you. you will do the digging. it is it the tools. and i do think that anyoung person gets benefits from this kind of a package should be forced to have e-mail etiquette or learn to not apply to yobs by - m. john? >> what about the educational system that encourages them to not get themselves in damaging experiences and documents on line. but think more. it is a solution to help better kid's repitations . >> -- reputations. >> what do you want to see in the potential hires john? >> i amorried about a person that is motivated. if you don't have a motivated person. hire them to
what comes to mind i things like bernie madoff. whatould you do about that? budding bernie madoff and you do the investigation and homework and what you do before you let the kid n and pox on you if you can't figure out if he is a bad or good kid. i know they can do that, that is part of college. you can do it every day and no one will ever know. there is it a and given them three paths to screw up. that is it erased. and still in facebook page. that is another ways. if it is important to you....
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Jan 26, 2013
01/13
by
WUSA
tv
eye 94
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history, bernie madoff's billion-dollar ponzi scheme. then robert khuzami, a former federal prosecutor, took over the s.e.c.'s enforcement decision division. >> the results from the enforcement division alone the last three years have been the three highest number of enforcement cases we've ever brought. >> reporter: including 180 insider trading cases involving 430 defendants and nearly $900 million in illegal profits. what's been the most important case, in your view? >> that would probably have to be the galleon cases for the simple reasons it really focused on kind of insider trading as ad about businessmodel. >> reporter: in 2011, the head of the galleon group investment fund, raj rajaratnam, was convicted of paying for confidential information and leading the biggest insider trading scheme ever. now serving 11 years in prison, raj rajaratnam was fined $92 million, and that case has led to charges against 59 other defendants. the increase in insider trading cases is directly the result of what? >> there are many, many, many hedge fu
history, bernie madoff's billion-dollar ponzi scheme. then robert khuzami, a former federal prosecutor, took over the s.e.c.'s enforcement decision division. >> the results from the enforcement division alone the last three years have been the three highest number of enforcement cases we've ever brought. >> reporter: including 180 insider trading cases involving 430 defendants and nearly $900 million in illegal profits. what's been the most important case, in your view? >>...
WHUT (Howard University Television)
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155
Jan 1, 2013
01/13
by
WHUT
tv
eye 155
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tavis: to your point now, richard, nobody could know anything about bernie madoff and at any point be rooting for him. the strange thing about this movie is that you sit here and there are parts -- >> i know what you're saying. tavis: -- in this movie where you're actually rooting for this guy. is that weird or what? >> i had friends -- and i didn't know this was going to happen -- and we started screening it and friends of mine were calling me up very angry with me that they were rooting for this guy. [laughter] of course i was delighted by that, because it means you're identifying. it's holding up a mirror, somehow, that it's not a sociopath, it's us we're watching. tavis: yeah. first-time director. >> yeah. tavis: so at this stage in your career -- [laughter] >> why did i do it? tavis: with all due respect to mr. jarecki, he did a fine job, but how do you feel comfortable that he >> no, no, no. no, we talk about this all the time, everyone asks this question. he wrote the script, and it was -- [laughter] when i got off the plane and i called my agent and said, "this script is terri
tavis: to your point now, richard, nobody could know anything about bernie madoff and at any point be rooting for him. the strange thing about this movie is that you sit here and there are parts -- >> i know what you're saying. tavis: -- in this movie where you're actually rooting for this guy. is that weird or what? >> i had friends -- and i didn't know this was going to happen -- and we started screening it and friends of mine were calling me up very angry with me that they were...
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madoff with boots, doing what bernie madoff would do in his ponzi scheme. he never got caught. >> they take a dim view -- sentencing them to 20 years, and another got 99 years. the code of the west still counts for something. if you break it, the rangers come after you. >> 99 years for cattle rustling. serious sentence for the bernie madoff -- >> provocative -- from "pulp fiction" to "inglourious basterds," he has spent 20 years enteraining audiences. our arts editor sat down recently with quentin tarantino. >> what's your name? >> django. >> and you're the one i'm looking for. >> "django unchained," the new film by tarantino about slavery in the south told like a spaghetti western. >> i am a big fan of the director of the original "django" and his west is the most violent, brutal and surreal west and no character is guaranteed safe passage and when i thought of the closest equivalent of that west that he pre sented i thought being aslave a slave in the antebellum south. >> in my world you have to ge t dirty. >> violence is a key subject of your work. >> it
madoff with boots, doing what bernie madoff would do in his ponzi scheme. he never got caught. >> they take a dim view -- sentencing them to 20 years, and another got 99 years. the code of the west still counts for something. if you break it, the rangers come after you. >> 99 years for cattle rustling. serious sentence for the bernie madoff -- >> provocative -- from "pulp fiction" to "inglourious basterds," he has spent 20 years enteraining audiences. our...
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123
Jan 19, 2013
01/13
by
FOXNEWSW
tv
eye 123
favorite 0
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bernie madoff stole $65 million. corporate ceos are getting caught with their hand in the cookie jar. politicians are caught doing bad stuff. we are hearing about it more. unfortunately, though, it does seem, you know, quick congregation. >> andrea: utterance scends sports. politics, wall street. >> eric: bernie madoff wasn't -- >> bob: bernie madoff wasn't seen by a hero. >> eric: he was a hero before he got caught. rock star in wall street. >> bob: i can't imagine that. anyway, if you look back at say baseball for example, when i was growing up, i was a big fan of mickey mantle. it was just, my hero, right? the fact was mickey would show up drunk every game he played in. a big boozeer. he would go back to the dugout and smoke cigarettes. that never got out because there weren't enough places for it to be disseminated. now with all the outlets available there is nothing that anybody can do. i don't know if the percentage is higher now than then, but i can go back through sports anyway and you can find people who che
bernie madoff stole $65 million. corporate ceos are getting caught with their hand in the cookie jar. politicians are caught doing bad stuff. we are hearing about it more. unfortunately, though, it does seem, you know, quick congregation. >> andrea: utterance scends sports. politics, wall street. >> eric: bernie madoff wasn't -- >> bob: bernie madoff wasn't seen by a hero. >> eric: he was a hero before he got caught. rock star in wall street. >> bob: i can't...
1,148
1.1K
Jan 22, 2013
01/13
by
FBC
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you were brought in after the bernie madoff which the sec missed. four years later can the sec, will the sec catch the next bernie madoff? >> well i think the answer to that is a resounding yes. the agency has increased its expertise, its use of data, its specialized focus and a whole bunch of other new initiatives that make us better equipped to be a market watchdog and effective enforcement authority. >> there may be madoffs out there and allen stanford's out there that may slip through the cracks that your net may not catch, is that fair to say? >> there is always risk that there is wrongdoing going on that you don't catch as early as you would like to but we are much better positioned to do so today. we have private sector experts across the agency who are steeped in the products and markets and transactions of wall street and financial transactions. we have specialized units who are focused on these areas. we reduced process. we have better techniques. all in all we are well-positioned going forward in the future. >> as you know since you annou
you were brought in after the bernie madoff which the sec missed. four years later can the sec, will the sec catch the next bernie madoff? >> well i think the answer to that is a resounding yes. the agency has increased its expertise, its use of data, its specialized focus and a whole bunch of other new initiatives that make us better equipped to be a market watchdog and effective enforcement authority. >> there may be madoffs out there and allen stanford's out there that may slip...
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52
Jan 9, 2013
01/13
by
WMAR
tv
eye 52
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we have learned of a wall street c scandal that could be bigger than the one contrived by bernie madoff. ordinary americans, investors, losing billions of dollars, thinking they were riding the chinese economic boom, only to get a very big shock. abc's chief investigative correspondent brian ross is on the case. >> reporter: as one chinese company after another managed to get listed on nasdaq and the new york stock exchange, al smith and his wife in boise, idaho, saw it as a safe way to get in on china's huge economic boom. >> you think there's some kind of stamp of approval once they come on these exchanges. >> reporter: but they wound up losing $60,000, when they invested in a chinese coal company traded on the new york stock exchange that, it turns out, had no coal mine. >> i'm not a big guy or a rich guy. just -- was pretty tough for us. >> reporter: u.s. authorities say smith's money and that of many other americans ended up in the pockets of the coal company boss, a kind of chinese version of bernie madoff. all part of what an abc news investigation found is a wave of suspected fr
we have learned of a wall street c scandal that could be bigger than the one contrived by bernie madoff. ordinary americans, investors, losing billions of dollars, thinking they were riding the chinese economic boom, only to get a very big shock. abc's chief investigative correspondent brian ross is on the case. >> reporter: as one chinese company after another managed to get listed on nasdaq and the new york stock exchange, al smith and his wife in boise, idaho, saw it as a safe way to...
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122
Jan 10, 2013
01/13
by
KOFY
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eye 122
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abc news has a report on wave of alleged frauds bigger in scale than what bernie madoff pulled off. dozens of chinese companies that have gone belly-up. the story from chief correspondent brian ross. >> as one chinese company after another managed to get listed on nasdaq and new york stock exchange, al smith and his wife saw it as a safe way to get in on china's huge economic boom. >> you think there is some kind of stamp of approval when once they come on the exchanges. >> necessity ended up losing much of their retirement money, $60,000 when they invested in a chinese coal company. it turned out it had no coal mine. >> i'm not a big guy or rich guy. it's tough for us. >> u.s. authorities say his money and many other americans ended up in the pockets of coal company boss, a chinese version of bernie madoff. all part of what an investigation found is a wave of suspected fraud by some 70 chinese companies once listed on u.s. stock exchanges. >> many cases we have already filed is brazenness of fraud. >> including what happened to china integrated energy. according to a lawsuit, these
abc news has a report on wave of alleged frauds bigger in scale than what bernie madoff pulled off. dozens of chinese companies that have gone belly-up. the story from chief correspondent brian ross. >> as one chinese company after another managed to get listed on nasdaq and new york stock exchange, al smith and his wife saw it as a safe way to get in on china's huge economic boom. >> you think there is some kind of stamp of approval when once they come on the exchanges. >>...
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99
Jan 22, 2013
01/13
by
FBC
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eye 99
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>> can the sec, will the sec catch the next bernie madoff? >> the resounding answer is yes. increasing expertise, the use of data, specialized focus and a whole bunch of other new initiatives making us better equipped to be a market watchdog and enforcement authority. >> but he did acknowledge there is a risk that they always won't catch all the bad guys early enough. cheryl. cheryl: great interview. peter, thank you very much. all right, we'll b we will be tg about dell coming up. who else is coming up on the show? a lot of chatter around this company and the future, will it go private, a lot of questions, charlie will have more answers coming up. we now have 40 minutes to go. twins. i didn't see them coming. i have obligations. cute obligations, but obligations. i need to rethink the core of my portfolio. what i really need is sleep. introducing the ishares core, building blocks for the heart of your portfolio. find out why 9 out of 10 large professional investors choose ishares for their etfs. ishares by blackrock. call 1-800-ishares for a prospectus which includes invest
>> can the sec, will the sec catch the next bernie madoff? >> the resounding answer is yes. increasing expertise, the use of data, specialized focus and a whole bunch of other new initiatives making us better equipped to be a market watchdog and enforcement authority. >> but he did acknowledge there is a risk that they always won't catch all the bad guys early enough. cheryl. cheryl: great interview. peter, thank you very much. all right, we'll b we will be tg about dell...
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275
Jan 18, 2013
01/13
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MSNBCW
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eye 275
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>> bernie madoff. >> the baseball hall last week made me think about this -- >> let's leave manti out of this. >> the thing with all sports and all society have to reckon with at some point is the fact that the technology and science are going to raise these questions over and over again as we go forward. because it's not totally clear where you start -- where you draw the lines. right now we think tommy johns surgery is okay, even though you come back with a stronger arm than you had before. that's a medical enhancement. that's not something that's part of your natural gift. that's something that you earned. at some point we'll have laser surgery that will allow them to see better. is that a drug? is that something you should be allowed to have or not? people will be able to do things scientifically, technologically to their bodies to make them better performers without any effort. so where do the lines get drawn? how do we figure out how to cope with the march of science? >> like a futurologist. >> last month bartolo colon, came back from a 93 miles an hour. >> that's okay but hgh i
>> bernie madoff. >> the baseball hall last week made me think about this -- >> let's leave manti out of this. >> the thing with all sports and all society have to reckon with at some point is the fact that the technology and science are going to raise these questions over and over again as we go forward. because it's not totally clear where you start -- where you draw the lines. right now we think tommy johns surgery is okay, even though you come back with a stronger...
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and that makes them though bernie madoff of finance. he was right about the notion. charles: to train one point, i looked at that slide. you do not need the name-calling . you look at their products versus other consumer goods products and their gross margins of 80% versus 40s and you say, while back, there is something here without necessarily having to go to the next step. most of the time the distributor gives the product and they cannot sell it. charlie: they apparently dropped the investigation. they were investigated on a lot of these claims. it looks like they want to reopen the investigation. [talking over each other] dagen: he is not the fairy godmother. charles: ackman will go to congress on this. dagen: thank you. thank you. connell: thank you to both of you guys. dagen: new poll says that 77% of americans believe washington is hurting the country. could the see also hurt corporate profits. connell: cheryl casone is coming up next as market continues. ♪ cheryl: i am cheryl casone and a new poll says 77% of americans believe washington is hurting the nati
and that makes them though bernie madoff of finance. he was right about the notion. charles: to train one point, i looked at that slide. you do not need the name-calling . you look at their products versus other consumer goods products and their gross margins of 80% versus 40s and you say, while back, there is something here without necessarily having to go to the next step. most of the time the distributor gives the product and they cannot sell it. charlie: they apparently dropped the...
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Jan 15, 2013
01/13
by
MSNBCW
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eye 179
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this was only in october. >> because bernie madoff was one of the biggest frauds in the history of the world. m history of finance maybe. lance is the biggest fraud in the history of sport. >> what happens to his teammates and to all the others that are affected by this? he is saying apparently to oprah that there was a level playing field because this was what was done. this was common practice. does that mean that everyone is now tarred with this reputation as well? >> well, many of his former teammates were caught cheating at different points in time. tyler hamilton, floyd landis, and then they all turned on armstrong, and andrea, when they vacated those seven tour de france titles, they did not award them to anyone else because the sport was so tainted at the time, but, you know, as everyone knows, you know, everybody else was doing it is never a good excuse, and certainly is nott an excuse in this case. people like betsy andrews felt that not only they were telling the truth and then the whole lance armstrong machine came down on them, they felt that they were intimated into keepi
this was only in october. >> because bernie madoff was one of the biggest frauds in the history of the world. m history of finance maybe. lance is the biggest fraud in the history of sport. >> what happens to his teammates and to all the others that are affected by this? he is saying apparently to oprah that there was a level playing field because this was what was done. this was common practice. does that mean that everyone is now tarred with this reputation as well? >> well,...
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87
Jan 10, 2013
01/13
by
WMAR
tv
eye 87
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madoff's ponzi scheme. it involves everyday american investors pouring their money into what was supposed to be a big boom overseas, only to be in for an expensive shock. here's abc's chief investigative correspondent brian ross with the report. >> reporter: it is a set of alleged scams and frauds from far away in china that has affected thousands of american investors and their pension funds. >> it hurts. it does. >> reporter: and it strikes at the very credibility of the big stock exchanges which allowed the chinese companies to sell their stock here. >> hundreds of billions of dollars still at stake. >> reporter: yet when we went to get answers, no one wanted to appear in our report. not the people at nasdaq. >> this interview is over right now. it's over right now. used to er: not the prominent promote the very companies now accused of scamming investors. >> just a moment, general. >> no. >> reporter: and certainly not some of the accused scammers halfway around the world. >> no cameras. >> reporter: wh
madoff's ponzi scheme. it involves everyday american investors pouring their money into what was supposed to be a big boom overseas, only to be in for an expensive shock. here's abc's chief investigative correspondent brian ross with the report. >> reporter: it is a set of alleged scams and frauds from far away in china that has affected thousands of american investors and their pension funds. >> it hurts. it does. >> reporter: and it strikes at the very credibility of the big...
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Jan 17, 2013
01/13
by
CNNW
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sunny, what makes someone like bernie madoff tick? >> in the world of criminal psychology, we call it the elite deviant. the power elite. what fuels it is this grandiose self regard that you are smarter than everyone else combined with a thrill seeking and what's interesting when they study the mines of these criminals and they interview them, they really get a rush. almost like a drug high from bilking the system or cheating someone that they believe is not as smart as them. sometimes that's even the person that trained them. most times people think it's just greed. it's so much more complex than greed. greed mixed in with the thrill seeking behavior mixed in with the urge to compete and finally mixed in with truly a personality disorder. if you have all of that, you have the makings of a bernie ma dor. >> the grandiose sense of self that translates the athletes you were talking about before and people having sex and cheating on their spouses. at the end of the day, i'm going to get caught. >> i used to think that all the time when i
sunny, what makes someone like bernie madoff tick? >> in the world of criminal psychology, we call it the elite deviant. the power elite. what fuels it is this grandiose self regard that you are smarter than everyone else combined with a thrill seeking and what's interesting when they study the mines of these criminals and they interview them, they really get a rush. almost like a drug high from bilking the system or cheating someone that they believe is not as smart as them. sometimes...
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77
Jan 10, 2013
01/13
by
WMAR
tv
eye 77
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madoff. >> ordinary american investors are losing billions of dollars, thinking they were riding the chinese economic boom. not so, maybe. here's abc's chief investigative correspondent brian ross. >> reporter: as one chinese company after another managed to get listed on nasdaq and the new york stock exchange, al smith and his wife in boise, idaho saw it as a safe way to get in on china's huge economic boom. but they ended up losing much of their retirement money. $60,000 when they invested in a chinese company traded on the new york stock exchange, that it turns out had no coal mine. >> i'm not a big guy or a rich guy. it was pretty tough for us. >> reporter: u.s. authorities say smith's money, and that of many other americans ended up in the pockets of the coal company boss, a chinese version of bernie madoff. a wave of suspected fraud by some 70 chinese companies once listed on u.s. stocks exchanges. >> the common theme we've already filed is the brazenness of the fraud. it's extraordinar
madoff. >> ordinary american investors are losing billions of dollars, thinking they were riding the chinese economic boom. not so, maybe. here's abc's chief investigative correspondent brian ross. >> reporter: as one chinese company after another managed to get listed on nasdaq and the new york stock exchange, al smith and his wife in boise, idaho saw it as a safe way to get in on china's huge economic boom. but they ended up losing much of their retirement money. $60,000 when they...
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61
Jan 24, 2013
01/13
by
WUSA
tv
eye 61
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was a laughingstock when it missed the bernie madoff ponzi scheme, and it spent the last three years trying to restore its reputation. under the outgoing enforcement director robert guzani, himself a former prosecutor, it has had a record number of cases, including 180 insider trading cases but the appointment of mary jo white is a sign the pressure is not going to let up. if anything, they're going to be turning up the heat at the s.e.c. >> pelley: well, anthony, while you were in the chilly alps, we got a lot of good economic news here at home today. we saw that layoffs are down, initial claims for unemployment benefits hit 330, 000, is the lowest level in five years. and on with the today, the s & p 500 briefly crossed 1500 for the first time since 2007. it closed just under that. what are you hearing from the world's bankers there? >> reporter: well, scott, i spoke with christine lagarde, the head of the international monetary fund today, who like most here agrees the atmosphere is much more optimistic than it was a year ago, but lagarde is more guarded than most, and she calls t
was a laughingstock when it missed the bernie madoff ponzi scheme, and it spent the last three years trying to restore its reputation. under the outgoing enforcement director robert guzani, himself a former prosecutor, it has had a record number of cases, including 180 insider trading cases but the appointment of mary jo white is a sign the pressure is not going to let up. if anything, they're going to be turning up the heat at the s.e.c. >> pelley: well, anthony, while you were in the...
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169
Jan 10, 2013
01/13
by
KGO
tv
eye 169
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. >>> coming up, forget about bernie madoff. we're talking about a bigger more costly financial scandal. >>> and pictures are worth a thousand words. a new app shows you how ugly binge drinking can be. you're watching "world news now." ♪ one bourbon, one scotch, and one beer ♪ >> announcer: "world news now" weather brought to you by colonial penn life insurance. before the sneeze, help protect with a spray. before the tissue, help defend with a wipe. before the cold & flu season, help prevent with lysol. because when you have 10 times more protection with each hand wash... and kill 99.9% of germs around the house with each spray... those healthy habits start to add up. this season, a good offense is the best defense and lysol has your family covered because that's our mission for health. >>> abc news has learned of a wall street scandal that could be bigger than the one contrived by bernie madoff. >> ordinary american investors are losing billions of dollars, thinking they were riding the chinese economic boom. not so, maybe
. >>> coming up, forget about bernie madoff. we're talking about a bigger more costly financial scandal. >>> and pictures are worth a thousand words. a new app shows you how ugly binge drinking can be. you're watching "world news now." ♪ one bourbon, one scotch, and one beer ♪ >> announcer: "world news now" weather brought to you by colonial penn life insurance. before the sneeze, help protect with a spray. before the tissue, help defend with a...
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Jan 26, 2013
01/13
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CURRENT
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bernie madoff would really like to study that that doesn't have morality and ethics. i don't buy the idea that fiscal issues is not a social issue. of course it's a social issue. >> john: that's a great point. >> the counterpoint i would make is new york city, 5-1 democrat to republican. but we haven't had a democratic mayor in 20 years. there is room. there is room for fiscal conservativism here. there is some room, maybe not a lot, and maybe not in new york city exactly but there is some room for social conservatism as well. but from a fiscalcally conservative point there is room to vote for a republican candidate. it has been proven here in new york for the last 20 years. >> john: rick, let me go back to you. talking to the g.o.p.'s meeting and messaging versus the actual message. the poll shows that americans favor abortion rights or most of the president's gun control measures are quite popular or 50% of americans support marriage equality. is it really more the matter of the message than how they present it. >> you have a poll that shows that americans are more
bernie madoff would really like to study that that doesn't have morality and ethics. i don't buy the idea that fiscal issues is not a social issue. of course it's a social issue. >> john: that's a great point. >> the counterpoint i would make is new york city, 5-1 democrat to republican. but we haven't had a democratic mayor in 20 years. there is room. there is room for fiscal conservativism here. there is some room, maybe not a lot, and maybe not in new york city exactly but there...
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Jan 20, 2013
01/13
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CNNW
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. >> you're looking at the bernie madoff of sport. this is the biggest fraud in the history of sport, the biggest. he couldn't have done it alone. >> armstrong has been stripped of his seven tour de france victories, banned from his sport, left his charity and lost nearly everything. but he hopes comments like these he made on the own network -- >> they are my mistake and i'm sorry for that. >> -- might be enough to help restore his reputation and rewrite his story. >> you win the tour de france seven times, you have a happy marriage, you have children -- it's just this mythic, perfect story. and it wasn't true. >> it's the greatest sports story ever told in many ways. that's why it's been the most traumatic fall from grace. >> yes or no, did you ever take banned substances to enhance your cycling performance? >> yes. my cocktail, so to speak, was only epo, but not a lot, transfusions and testosterone. >> doping, he told winfrey, was just part of doing business. >> we have to have air in our tires or we have to have water in our bottl
. >> you're looking at the bernie madoff of sport. this is the biggest fraud in the history of sport, the biggest. he couldn't have done it alone. >> armstrong has been stripped of his seven tour de france victories, banned from his sport, left his charity and lost nearly everything. but he hopes comments like these he made on the own network -- >> they are my mistake and i'm sorry for that. >> -- might be enough to help restore his reputation and rewrite his story....
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Jan 19, 2013
01/13
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FBC
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enrons, bernie madoffs. that is generalized to all business people are that way. we don't treat other segments of society that way. we don't judge our journalists by the bad eggs. we don't judge our doctors that way. neil: actually i do. society doesn't. if there is such a thing as business ethics czar, what would first thing you would try to correct or get across to people? >> we have to get out of this trap that business all about making money. of course business needs to make money. that is not its purpose. not its highest purpose. my body needs to produce red blood cells for me to live. if i don't produce red blood cells i die. similarly business creates value for customers. business has to tell the story. we're the value creators in this world, neil. we're the heroes. we're helping humanity to advance, make progress, new inventions. our lives are transformed by technologies that businesses are creating. neil: we came off a campaign was pilloried saying 47% of the pple get something from the government and there were many in that 47%, might have gotten their n
enrons, bernie madoffs. that is generalized to all business people are that way. we don't treat other segments of society that way. we don't judge our journalists by the bad eggs. we don't judge our doctors that way. neil: actually i do. society doesn't. if there is such a thing as business ethics czar, what would first thing you would try to correct or get across to people? >> we have to get out of this trap that business all about making money. of course business needs to make money....
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Jan 28, 2013
01/13
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CSPAN2
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madoff or my cousins best friend or my neighbor that came and presented it at my children's school or the old age as a body. so people are discouraged from asking questions because these people come at you as though they are their friend and of course we do not go after our friends hard questions to are you asking about the best interest, how are you asking in the best interest. are you looking at the fiduciary standard? >> host: a lot of people need free dinner. is their anything wrong with getting a free state and a glass of wine for a sales spiels or are you against going in the first place? >> guest: when i did an interview if there is one thing you would be the free meal. it seems so harmless. you are going to get a nice steak and lobster and you don't have to buy anything. if people sell fees they can tell you that it isn't going to end a very well for you. the problem is our defenses are down when you eat coming you know this, and these people could be very appealing. i'm going to explain why. there's a whole apparatus to teach how to be appealing. you know, there are technique
madoff or my cousins best friend or my neighbor that came and presented it at my children's school or the old age as a body. so people are discouraged from asking questions because these people come at you as though they are their friend and of course we do not go after our friends hard questions to are you asking about the best interest, how are you asking in the best interest. are you looking at the fiduciary standard? >> host: a lot of people need free dinner. is their anything wrong...
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Jan 13, 2013
01/13
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CNNW
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. >> bernie madoff, if he had shown up three months after the fact. >> that is some company you're putting armstrong in. >> he is in that league. >> i was a national hero, cancer survivor, but let's be clear. he did this to himself. >> this is all self-induced. and he is, i think we can safely say, the biggest fraud, the worst fraud in the history of sports. >> all sports? >> oh, i absolutely think so. he transcended sports. not just as an athlete. but he moved into that world of our culture with cancer. so, i think things are different. i think the reality is the old days of crying on oprah's couch and coming clean, first of all, i think the american public is smarter than that. this notion that he is going to be able to compete. come back and compete, again. by the way, come back to what? he is retired from cycling. it's triathlons and marathons. it's driving him crazy that he couldn't do this. should have thought of that years ago. this notion he is able to compete, even if he gives up all the goods. all the doctors, names, everything he could possibly think of only reduce his lifetime
. >> bernie madoff, if he had shown up three months after the fact. >> that is some company you're putting armstrong in. >> he is in that league. >> i was a national hero, cancer survivor, but let's be clear. he did this to himself. >> this is all self-induced. and he is, i think we can safely say, the biggest fraud, the worst fraud in the history of sports. >> all sports? >> oh, i absolutely think so. he transcended sports. not just as an athlete. but...
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Jan 19, 2013
01/13
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FOXNEWSW
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it's a little bit like that theory of the last investors into the bernie madoff ponzi scheme. if it was just about embarrass scpment you couldn't go there, tell us that. i think most of america could understand that. but until he does it, i think his cume is going to continue to fall. he needs to answer what the athletic director said; that is, tell his story. the athletic director has put notre dame on the hook with him. they're all in. it's time that manti te'o come forward. >> once he does and we hear it and talk about it, let's leave him alone alone and we will move on as well. >> reporter: you bet, greta. >> no one wants to hear from mant iste'o as much as the notre dame student president. he says, when manti speaks the campus will stop and listen. good evening. tell me, what was your thought when you heard this news? >> thanks for having me on. i was shocked and confused. i kept reading the article on deadspine spin and trying to see what happened in the story. a the love student his more questions than answers. a lot of students started to speculate on what happened. fo
it's a little bit like that theory of the last investors into the bernie madoff ponzi scheme. if it was just about embarrass scpment you couldn't go there, tell us that. i think most of america could understand that. but until he does it, i think his cume is going to continue to fall. he needs to answer what the athletic director said; that is, tell his story. the athletic director has put notre dame on the hook with him. they're all in. it's time that manti te'o come forward. >> once he...
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Jan 5, 2013
01/13
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CSPAN2
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madoff look like a piker but of course they have traditional kinds of organized-crime which were shaking down people, extortion, they viewed it as just protecting their business from other guys who might try to shake you down and murder for hire etc.. their repertoires grew and grew as a result of trying to protect their turf and their way of doing things. >> more for road ivan state capital as booktv, american history tv and c-span local content vehicles look behind the scenes at the history of literary life of providence today at noon eastern on c-span2's booktv and sunday at 5:00 on american history tv on c-span3. >> from the jefferson library of monticello, historian henry -- henry wiencek talks about thomas jefferson's relationship to slavery. jefferson sought financial gain through the ownership and labor of his slaves but america's third president called silent profits. the dr. utilize recent archaeological findings at jefferson's estate, monticello and jefferson's papers in his research. this is just over an hour. >> our guest speaker this afternoon is henry wiencek who will be t
madoff look like a piker but of course they have traditional kinds of organized-crime which were shaking down people, extortion, they viewed it as just protecting their business from other guys who might try to shake you down and murder for hire etc.. their repertoires grew and grew as a result of trying to protect their turf and their way of doing things. >> more for road ivan state capital as booktv, american history tv and c-span local content vehicles look behind the scenes at the...
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Jan 22, 2013
01/13
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FBC
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madoff. i asked him if all the improvements and changes that he has made here at the enforcement division will stop the next madoff? he said the answer is quote, a resounding yes. david and lauren. david: all right. although one get the sense we will see another madoff somewhere along the line. peter, thank you very much. great interview. appreciate it. >> thank you. lauren: the parent company for 1500 franchises already feeling the pain of the health care law. up next the ceo of the dwyer group tells us why the law is killing jobs in a fox business exclusive. ♪ . [ engine revving ] ♪ [ male announcer ] every car we build must make adrenaline pump and pulses quicken. ♪ to help you not just to stay alive... but feel alive. the new c class is no exception. it's a mercedes-benz through and through. see your authorized mercedes-benz dealer for exceptional offers through mercedes-benz financial services. lauren: welcome back. time for a look at today's market drivers. stocks reversed course
madoff. i asked him if all the improvements and changes that he has made here at the enforcement division will stop the next madoff? he said the answer is quote, a resounding yes. david and lauren. david: all right. although one get the sense we will see another madoff somewhere along the line. peter, thank you very much. great interview. appreciate it. >> thank you. lauren: the parent company for 1500 franchises already feeling the pain of the health care law. up next the ceo of the...
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Jan 19, 2013
01/13
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FOXNEWSW
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it's a little bit like that theory of the last investors in the bernie madoff ponzi scheme. if it was just about embarrassment and you couldn't go there, come out and tell us that. because i think most of america would understand it. but, until such time as he does it, i think his cue is going to continue to fall and he needs to answer what the athletic director jack swa swarmbrick said. notre dame is for him. and it's time he comes forward. >> greta: let's leave it alone and then-- >> and then we're understanding, absolutely. >> greta: tim, thank you. >> you bet, greta. >> greta: nobody wants to hear from manti te'o as his fellow notre dame students, and student body president says when manti speaks the entire campus will stop and listen. bret joins us, tell me, good evening and tell me what was your thought when you heard this news? >> thanks for having me on, greta. when i heard the news this afternoon i was shocked and confused, and reading the article on deadspin, trying to see what had happened in the story. i think a lot of students had more questions than answers, an
it's a little bit like that theory of the last investors in the bernie madoff ponzi scheme. if it was just about embarrassment and you couldn't go there, come out and tell us that. because i think most of america would understand it. but, until such time as he does it, i think his cue is going to continue to fall and he needs to answer what the athletic director jack swa swarmbrick said. notre dame is for him. and it's time he comes forward. >> greta: let's leave it alone and then--...